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  • Department Lester. Police should Lester has I'm asking been in Moscow, Havana for an FBI report. Department and the New York Police also be able to provide information and on I suggest that someone could profitably talk to the Atlanta police and make
  • 30 , 10*30 am . C IN CPAC FOR POL'AD LIM DIS . . OANH ASKED JOHNSON S E E HIM AT H I S HOME LATE YESTERDAY E V E N I N G , S A ID HE D E S I R E D INFORM US THAT IN ORDER PROVIDE LOCAL B A S I S ' FOR USE OF TROOPS IN SAIGON TO BACK UP P O L I C E
  • a'"'live - yea:c military ass1s ~:a.nce plan wifa India provided the Indians ;ul (a}-.11m'it~ force goals, (b~ hold down p=ocurement from the Soviet ,,. __ ,,.. ~ --·.... ....---. fil.~~Sl~~- ~~r::_~~~~~~~~o.n o~ fcrdgn exchange from economic develcpm.ent
  • essential imports during FY 1969. This loan will continue our commodity import support but at a level lower than the $15 million we have provided annually during the past two years. For eight years Tunisia has been putting substantial amounts in This has
  • the monstrosity of selfishness. But granting an understanding of the word moderation-providing that in reasonableness in the training and exer­ cise of the child mind there can be no fear-there cannot be any argument that child training in love and through love
  • of the week, he spent a good deal of time meeting with and entertaining the provincial officials convened in Saigon for a "National Administrative Congress." While it is too early to assess the results of the Congress, it provided a unique UECLASSIFIE E.O
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh HUGHES -- I -- 18 BH: Island Beach State Park, oh, possibly fifteen minutes as the crow flies north of Atlantic City. You would place it from there. There is a state house there provided for the governor as kind
  • am to be Chainnan, t hrough which all health legislation is to be handled. Jimmie Byrnes is eager to request the Public Health Services, at my suggestion to formul a te a program for providing inductees from rejectees . I gave out a press comment
  • , and the President took a whole armload of records, which were the records that had been turned over to Judge Ireland Graves. It must have been a stack a foot high of books, ledgers, accounts, journals, income tax returns and everything else, and he carried them out
  • at what I like to call the intersection of two disciplines. One of those disciplines is diplomacy and the other is journalism. Where these disciplines intersect there are going to be sparks, and there's going to be conflict. Every once in awhile it gets
  • Ljndon Johnson's friends also. For example, Charlie Guy, the editor of the newspaper, the Avalanche Journal in Lubbock, became a very dear friend of mine. While he and I were not always of the same philosophy, especially regarding labor, we did enjoy
  • , that was the personnel setup. here to the Library. Frank, of course, came down I have since had two jobs, one at Virginia Poly- technic Institute as head of their PR photo operation, and right now I'm teaching photo journalism at Rochester Institute of Technology. MG
  • participated in writing it. M: It's always a group project. Was there any person in particular who gave you trouble on the Hill, or did it depedd on the issue? S: It depends on the issue. Since I was really providing technical information wherever I went
  • and its fellow travelers in journalism, and everyone got edgier and more tense. If you sat down to dinner and someone made some stupid comment about the press, there was likely to be a very quick rejoinder. I think it is true that by the end of my tour I
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Rather -- I -- 5 in Texas journalism [helped]. Mind you, Stuart didn't know me from toad hop; he had just sort of taken me into tow. F: He had heard of Houston. (Laughter) R
  • , of the Wall Street Journal, who later became under Nixon or Ford assistant secretary of defense on public relations or deputy assistant on public information, wrote a story called liThe Guided leak." The policy was quite clear to do this sort of thing
  • Stanton, who was a dear friend of Senator Johnson's, and Mr. Bill Paley had been awarded a scroll at the University o f Arizona from the Walter Cronkite School of Radio and TV Journalism. were the first recipients. So they I guess somebody gave a lot
  • more of that with him, but I'm not certain in my own mind that everyone isn't pretty much the same way that way. They all feel that way, and I'm sure that Senator [Daniel] Inouye today feels that print journalism and television has done him
  • ]¥ to you on the dates provided for in your contract. They will also administer all other rights in your, and in their mutual, interest as per the provisions in the contract. ON HOWIT WORKSbas there.fore Prentice-Hall, Inc. is a publishing house
  • did not properly represent union labor. Ma Official act? D1 Tea. Ms liO'Vf is Beaumont Journal-Enterprise handling matter? What is Carl White's Runs a little labor paper. How does Jones, editor. feel about it? Da Anti-Roosevelt. Ma Has he
  • to juvenile authorities. -e9HFID6HTI -2- flh- -88KFIDEN 1DU. SELECTED RACIALDEVELOPMENTS ANDDISTURBANCES The ''Milwaukee Journal," a daily newspaper in Milwaukee, carried a news item yesterday which set forth information that two 13-year-old Wells
  • Biographical information; how Gorman got into journalism; how Gorman got involved in writing about conditions in mental hospitals; the Oklahoma State Mental Hospital; Gorman's work at the Daily Oklahoman; newspaper publisher, E.K. Gaylord's
  • in The United States has provided economic, technical, and mili ­ tary assistance to Viet-Nam since 1950. After the Geneva accords of 1954 the U.S. M ilitary Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) became the only outside source of m ilitary aid for the Vietnamese
  • Sheriff's Office are conducting an inv~stigation. -etJN F I DEN I IAb- ,-4- .. COMFIBEHTJ AI z-.. SELECTEDRACIAL DEVELOPMENTS AND DISTURBANCES PROTEST VIGIL, DAYTON,OHIO The "Journal Herald," a newspaper in general circulation in Dayton, Ohio, carried
  • integrity, but it was the most irresponsible pie c e of journalism I had seen in my years in Washington. ### DF.Tt!RMtMED TO BE AN f,,':AR~!NS. Cf.Nt't:L:..!::O ~EC. j .3 A~:~ AO~"INl'STR.'!iTIVS l't:·n l:? 0. '~~~CHl'\f~~r·s 1:.'.'J!ill, PJi~~:lO
  • for the Congress responding in kind, setting aside politics and dealing with the great national issues, and that we should try and move agriculture and our programs accordinglyo No one bought it very much I am afraid, but at least it provided some direction
  • audi­ e nces, Senate investigators disclosed yesterday. The trips were provided by • the 'Hamilton Wright Organi­ zation, an international firm , that was the subject yester­ day of a Senale Foreign Rela­ tions Com m i t t e e lobbying hearing
  • of the sort of political ambidexterity he would have to provide for Stevenson in the co~g campaign. is making double victory sign. SparkmaD, son of poor tenant fannel'&, has been de). egate to U.N., is II!ember of Senate banking and foreign relations
  • . ·. • ' ~ .· _.. . _, ;, ... • .... ' • ·, - • • , . ·j .• ( .. i-',. I : ;· ·_LA 6-6942 . ._.AIR .AGE TRAVEL 9101 Providence Avenue Silver Spring, Maryland . -\ \ . - - -· - · . :..:_.____ - -:-·- .. - __ ARIA ___ ..__c_o_o1_ · ·_ .~..___ _ _-t-- - " i 1 J:) .:;. > ..:1 'A11t1A . .. j 1 fJU
  • , IIPlease explain who all these people are taking notes. They think they're news reporters or something here, journal ists. Tell them that they're your staff and they just want to record every breath taken here. II Which he didn't do. So I told them who